Among the things that have arrived in the Woodson this week are some issues of a defunct Houston magazine called the Gargoyle. This publication was launched in 1928 as the first real Houston city magazine and it survived into the mid-1930s. It was quite sophisticated and looked at trends in dining, entertainment and business in addition to providing a good deal of local gossip. The back cover of almost every issue was an ad for real estate in the up and coming subdivision of River Oaks — more about this later.

The magazine is always worth the time spent on close perusal. Every issue I’ve ever read was full of interesting little Rice tidbits that I would never find anywhere else, making clear the central role the Institute played in Houston’s life. So I was expecting to find something — but I wasn’t expecting something as spectacular as this:

Click on it twice to zoom in and luxuriate in the minutiae. You’ll be glad you did. There’s a lot here that I will very carefully pick over in the next week or so.

I hope you don’t mind if I shared this on the Let’s Be Honest: facebook group for Rice alum.

Thanks for your work. This is one of the highlights of my day!

Martha (McGranahan) Cluett

On Tue, Nov 29, 2016 at 4:44 PM, Rice History Corner wrote:

> Melissa Kean posted: “Among the things that have arrived in the Woodson > this week are some issues of a defunct Houston magazine called the > Gargoyle. This publication was launched in 1928 as the first real Houston > city magazine and it survived into the mid-1930s. It was quite s” >

I remember the Alley Theater being in that area of Main Street sort of caddy-corner from Sears — I think that that 2Ks (ice cream shop extraordinaire) was nearby — it would have been near the southwest corner of Richmond (isn’t that called Wheeler there?) and Main Street. I’m sure you can check with the Alley to see if that is correct. Also, judging by the location of the map, I remember hearing the sound of auto racing at night through our south facing windows — of course, since the only air conditioning was from an attic fan (very efficient, I might add). I grew up near Braes Bayou in the 50s.

This is great! It reminds me of the old cover of the yellow pages that had a drawing of downtown Houston with lots of little “extras” sketched in. There was ALWAYS a picture of a cat and her kittens crossing the street.